Friday, October 24, 2014

Why rabbi Skorka labors

If one is a practitioner of the Talmudic Jewish religion, it is logical that one believes in the Talmud. Rabbi Skorka often quotes from the Talmud. He is steeped in rabbinic lore as he is a rabbi. The Talmud is anti-Christian in character. What does the Talmud have to say about the Crucifixion of Our Lord?

On a visit to the Community, the rabbi of Buenos Aires commented on Psalm 1 at the prayer in Santa Maria in TrastevereFriendship, dialogue and reflection on the Scripture characterised yesterday the visit to the Community of Sant'Egidio in Rome by the rector of the Rabbinical Seminary of Buones Aires, rabbi Abraham Skorka.

In the afternoon, the rabbi, together with founder of the Community Andrea Riccardi, visited the People of Peace Centre and met the immigrants that find solidarity and help in the Centre.

Later, in the basilica of Santa Maria in Trastevere, Skorka told about the friendship that binds him to Pope Francis and their common dream to change the Argentinean society and the world. Commenting on Psalm 1, the rabbi then underlined the importance of personally choosing to do good and work for a good future for many: "Beyond the events in which we live, but by goodness, righteousness, love, we leave an impression, and said: "There is a rabbinic story that speaks of a young man who asks an elderly man who was planting a tree that would bear fruit after many years, the young man tells him - but what is the use of planting it if you will not eat its fruit? - and the elder replied - my father also planted a tree for me, and I plant trees for those who will come".

To work together to build a future of peace, confident that "the seal of spirituality and affection that we leave will not be lost. A dream that binds together rabbi Skorka and Pope Francis, a dream that the Community of Sant'Egidio is committed to preserving and growing in prayer, in friendship with the poor, in the work for peace.

A rabbi lectures in Santa Maria in Trastevere (Rome, Italy)

Interfaith service of the Community of Sant'Egidio in Santa Maria in Trastevere

Rabbi Skorka, Francis, and the Community of Sant'Egidio share the common goal of destroying Catholic Italy through immigration.

"Riccardo Di Segni, chief rabbi of the Jewish community of Rome, questions of a sentence in the final report of the extraordinary synod on the family just ended at the Vatican, advancing the question that emerges from the text, with regard to marriage, the idea that Jews would live in sin and they would have had ended."

"With a certain hardness of form and substance Bishops are telling us today that we who follow the Torah of Moshe, we would sin and that our era is over. How hard is dialogue."

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I'm getting ready to write an article... off the record in a private conversation di segni added, "But for the Synod Jesus is the Messiah? How hard is dialogue."

NOTE: The original story on Vatican Insider is from Tuesday, 10/22. Just days after the release of the final synod document. The story is in Italian -- no English or Spanish version is available. And nobody in the secular or Catholic press noticed until now! Way to cover up for the enemies of the Church. Eponymous Flower is the one that is breaking the story.